When I married Nick, I thought I knew exactly who I was building my future with. We had been together for five years, and everything seemed perfect. Nick, a marketing guy, wasn’t exactly living his dream but was stable. I, on the other hand, was a successful attorney. We were fine with the dynamic — I worked hard, and he supported me.Nick’s one big dream was to have a son. He’d always talk about teaching him baseball, fixing cars, and giving him everything he never had.
While I wasn’t against kids, I wasn’t rushing into parenthood because my career was my passion. But Nick promised me, “When we finally have our boy, I’ll stay home and raise him. You keep your career.” I believed him and thought it sounded like a good plan.After two years, we finally got pregnant with a boy. Nick was ecstatic and kept telling everyone he was going to be a stay-at-home dad. The pregnancy was tough, but Nick’s excitement helped. When our son was born, everything seemed perfect at first.
However, things changed quickly. Nick started hesitating when the baby cried, and I found myself doing most of the nighttime duties. The excuses piled up, and before long, I was juggling work and parenting almost entirely alone. Then one night, Nick casually suggested I quit my job and stay home with the baby. I was shocked.I reminded him of his promise, but he shrugged it off, saying plans change. He even told me I should follow my “natural instinct” as a mother. That was the moment everything snapped. I told him if I quit my job,
t would be the same day we filed for divorce. I made it clear that if he couldn’t honor his word, I’d take full custody and child support based on my career earnings.Nick left, and a few days later, his mom called to say his dad had scolded him for breaking his promise. Nick returned, admitting he was wrong, and apologized. He stepped up, taking care of our son, doing night feedings, and cooking. We hired a part-time nanny for the longer workdays.It wasn’t perfect, but Nick became the father he always promised to be. And sometimes, when things get tough, I remind him, “I was serious about the divorce.” He grins and says, “Yeah, I’m never risking that again.”